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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Minerva Psychiatry 2025 March;66(1):38-45
DOI: 10.23736/S2724-6612.24.02571-5
Copyright © 2024 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA
language: English
Attitudes toward homosexuality: intergenerational comparisons of migrants living in Southern Italy
Gaetano DI NAPOLI ✉, Ambra GENTILE, Cinzia NOVARA, Maria GARRO
Department of Psychology, Educational Science and Human Movement, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy
BACKGROUND: The construct of homophobia is often associated with sexual minorities, whose members are immersed in a hostile and judgmental environment in which personal identity, especially sexual orientation, is not recognized. Scientific production, despite multi-ethnic societies, appears incomplete with regard to studies on attitudes toward homosexuality among migrants living in host countries, such as Italy.
METHODS: Convenience sample of first- and second-generation migrants living in Southern Italy (75 subjects aged between 18 and 55 years participated in the study [29.72±10.74 years], including 38 first-generation and 37 second-generation subjects). A form was used to collect demographic information The Italian Scale for the Measurement of Homonegativity (SIMO) was used.
RESULTS: The results showed significant effects of ethnic and religious affiliation on attitudes toward homosexuality, especially in the first generation.
CONCLUSIONS: This finding can probably be attributed to a higher level of integration in the host country as well as to a more conscious religious affiliation.
KEY WORDS: Attitude; Homophobia; Italy; Transients and migrants